Title: J P Leary, Consultant
1Act 31 in 3-D!!! Considerations for
Implementation and Evaluation
- J P Leary, Consultant
- American Indian Studies Program
- WI Department of Public Instruction
21989 Act 31
- 1989-1991 biennial budget bill.
- Included provisions related to American Indian
Studies. - Created the American Indian Studies Program at
DPI.
3Act 31 created the following statutory sections
- s. 115.28(17)(d) Wis. Stats.
- s. 118.01(c)7-8 Wis. Stats.
- s. 118.19(8) Wis. Stats.
- s. 121.02(1)(h) Wis. Stats.
- s. 121.02(1)(L)4 Wis. Stats.
4s.115.28(17)(d) Wis. Stats.Treaty Rights
Curriculum
- The State Superintendent shall
- In conjunction with the American Indian Language
and Culture Board, develop a curriculum for
grades 4 to 12 on the Chippewa Indians
treaty-based, off-reservation rights to hunt,
fish, and gather.
5s.118.01(c)7-8 Wis. Stats.Human Relations
- Each school board shall provide an instructional
program designed to give pupils - 7. An appreciation and understanding of
different value systems and cultures. - 8. At all grade levels, an understanding of
human relations, particularly with regard to
American Indians, Black Americans, and Hispanics.
6s.118.19(8) Wis. Stats.Teacher Certification
- Beginning July 1, 1991, the state superintendent
may not grant to any person a license to teach
unless the person has received instruction in the
study of minority group relations, including the
history, culture, and tribal sovereignty of the
federally recognized tribes and bands located in
the state.
7s.121.02(1)(h) Wis. Stats.Instructional Materials
- Each school board shall
- Provide adequate instructional materials, texts,
and library services which reflect the cultural
diversity and pluralistic nature of American
society.
8s.121.02(1)(L)4 Wis. Stats.K-12 Social Studies
Instruction
- Each school board shall
- Beginning September 1, 1991, as part of the
social studies curriculum, include instruction in
the history, culture, and tribal sovereignty of
the federally recognized American Indian tribes
and bands located in the state at least twice in
the elementary grades and at least once in the
high school grades.
9Act 31 Two Approaches
- Technical/Managerial
- Historically Situated
10Technical/Managerial View
- Problem State statues require and the Model
Academic Standards include a lot of topics that
must be covered. - Task Design curriculum that covers these areas
and prepares students for success on the WKCE. - Key questions
- What do the statutes and standards require?
- How can my curriculum balance these competing
needs?
11Standards-Based Reform
Relevant Statutes
Standards
Assessment
12American Indian Studies and Standards-Based
Reform
- Themes related to the history, culture, and
tribal sovereignty of the federally recognized
tribes and bands are reflected in the both the - Model Academic Standards for Social Studies
- Wisconsin Knowledge and Concepts Exams
13American Indian Studies and Standards-Based Reform
- There are three American Indian Studies-specific
standards - B.4.10 Explain the history, culture, tribal
sovereignty, and current status of the federally
recognized tribes and bands in Wisconsin. - B.8.11 Summarize major issues associated with the
history, culture, tribal sovereignty, and current
status of the federally recognized tribes and
bands in Wisconsin. - B.12.12 Analyze the history, culture, tribal
sovereignty, and current status of the federally
recognized tribes and bands in Wisconsin.
14American Indian Studies and Standards-Based Reform
- Because Wisconsins Model Academic Standards are
broadly thematic or skill-based, an additional 84
Social Studies standards can be met through
American Indian Studies content.
- See
- Integrating Wisconsin American Indian History,
Culture, and Tribal Sovereignty into the
Curriculum - and American Indian Studies, Standards, and
Curriculum - in the American Indian Studies Program
Information Packet
15Technical/Managerial View
- Education is a technical process.
- Approach is compliance-driven
- Is it going to be on the test?
- Practice is evaluated on narrowly-defined,
clearly measurable, often short-term objectives. - Values, social justice, etc. are secondary
considerations. - The technical skills are useful but the overall
approach is incomplete.
16Historically Situated
- Problems
- Misrepresentation or invisibility in the
curriculum - Lack of public understanding or awareness
- Conflict re Voight Decision
- Task
- Actively address these problems by providing
accurate, authentic instruction about the
history, culture, and tribal sovereignty. - Key questions
- Does my curriculum address these problems?
- Does it reflect legislative intent?
17When Students Learn This . . .
18Pre-School
19Early Elementary
I is for Indian appears in P.D. Eastman, The
Cat in the Hat Beginner Book Dictionary (New
York Random House, 1964).
20Intermediate Grades
21American History Textbook
- Some people use Native Americans instead of
Indians, although the word native is confusing.
It has two meanings. Anyone who is born in a
country in a native of that country, so many of
us are native Americans. Native also means to
have an origin, or beginning, in a country. As
far as we know, no people is native to America.
Our ancestors all came from somewhere else.
(italics in original)
Dangel,Susan. Teaching Guide and Resource Book
The First Americans, Book One of A History of US
by Joy Hakim, Susan Dangel and Maria Garriott.
(Baltimore, Md. Talent Development Middle
School, United States History Curriculum, Johns
Hopkins University, 2000).
22Words Commonly Used to Describe American Indians
in Textbooks
Noland, 1991
23Instead of This . . .
- These land cession treaties reflect U.S. demand
for - Fertile Land (1829-1848)
- Lead (1829)
- Timber (1837)
- Copper (1842)
24Usufructuary Rights
- Tribes reserved specific usage rights on ceded
lands, including hunting, fishing, and gathering. - Standard principle in real estate, similar to
usage rights retained after selling private
property. - Most treaties specified services or payments to
be provided to the tribe for a period or time or
in perpetuity.
25Treaty of 1837 Pine Tree Treaty
- Article 5. The privilege of hunting, fishing,
and gathering the wild rice, upon the lands, the
rivers and the lakes included in the territory
ceded, is guaranteed to the Indians, during the
pleasure of the President of the United States.
26Treaty of 1842 Copper Treaty
- Article II. The Indians stipulate for the right
of hunting on the ceded territory, with the other
usual privileges of occupancy, until required to
remove by the President of the United States, and
that the laws of the United States shall be
continued in force, in respect to their trade and
inter course with the whites, until otherwise
ordered by Congress.
27Voight Decision (1983)
- For generations, state wardens arrested
violators and confiscated their equipment - Fred and Mike Tribble (LCO) speared
off-reservation, were cited, and took the case to
court. - Suit filed in Federal Court, 7th Circuit
- Lac Courte Oreilles, et al. v. WI (LCO I), 700 F
2nd 341 (7th Cir.1983) upheld reserved rights,
and later cases defined their scope. - Multi-phase trial concluded in 1991.
28Voight and the Aftermath
- As Walt Bresette noted, the Voight Decision
caught the State of Wisconsin socially,
politically, and educationally unprepared.
29Anti-Treaty Flyer
- This flyer printed here was found in 1987 in a
tavern in Eagle River, WI. - Similar versions circulated throughout Wisconsin
in the late 1980s and early 1990s.
30School and Society
- This drawing was brought home by a student from
North Lakeland Elementary. - Other drawings showed someone firing a shotgun
at two Indians with a caption reading, Shoot the
Indians . . . save the fish.
31Anti-Indian Backlash
32Media Reaction
33Witness for Nonviolence
- Organized in 1987 to monitor harassment and
violence at boat landings. - Neutral third party to observe and document
abuses. - Other organizations, including treaty-rights
support groups, also were active.
34Movement Toward Act 31
- Ad Hoc Commission on Racism in Northern Wisconsin
(1984) - American Indian Language and Culture Education
Board - Wisconsin Indian Education Association
- Rep. Frank Boyle and Gov. Tommy Thompson
35Historically Situated
- Recognizes the importance of the social,
cultural, political, and historical context of
education. - Approach is driven by concern for justice.
- Practice is evaluated in terms of legislative
intent. - Larger policy considerations are secondary issues
at best. - Lacks framework for implementation.
36 Act 31 in 3-D!!!
- Merges Technical/Managerial and Historically
Situated Approaches - Acknowledges historical and contemporary contexts
- Recognizes political nature of teaching and
learning - Draws upon existing policy frameworks
(standards-based reform) for socially just ends
37 Act 31 in 3-D!!!
- What opportunities do the statutes and standards
provide for infusing American Indian Studies
content? - Evaluated in terms of
- Short-term Academic proficiency
- Intermediate Action for social justice (Banks)
- Long-term Remedying key social issues
- Requires a qualitative or mixed evaluation.
38 Evaluating Content
- Is the content of the lesson accurate?
- Is the portrayal of the community depicted
recognizable to them? - Does it reflect multiple perspectives, including
an insider perspective? - Does it address short-, intermediate-, and
long-term objectives?
39Act 31 Evaluations
- Three studies
- Scott Johnson (1996)
- Maureen Smith (1997)
- WIEA/WTEDA/UW-Extension (2001)
40Scott Johnson (1996)
- Random telephone survey of 43 public school
districts. - Districts tended to include more content related
to history, culture, and tribal sovereignty if
they - Were larger, or had a full-time curriculum
director - Had a significant population of American Indian
students - Were 25 miles or closer to a reservation
community. - Many districts thought they were in compliance,
but included American Indians only at the
elementary level in the context of a lesson on
early settlers. - Most districts excluded the critical issues of
tribal sovereignty and treaty rights.
41Maureen Smith (1997)
- Survey of 500 elementary and secondary schools
(both urban and rural) on awareness,
understanding, students perceptions and
understandings, concerns, curricular materials,
and training. - Detailed survey results showed an overall lack of
understanding of the requirements and essentially
confirmed Johnsons study.
42WIEA Survey (2000)
- Commissioned by Wisconsin Indian Education
Association - Survey given to K-12 principals and teachers,
teacher education programs, and CESAs - The study focused primarily on administrators
awareness and teachers practices. - A series of findings and recommendations emerged.
43Analysis
- All use a Technical/Managerial method to
investigate curriculum and instructional
practice. the what are they doing? - In each case, the authors seem to implicitly use
a Historically Situated approach to evaluate its
adequacy. the how well are they doing?
44Discussion
- Educators, implicitly or explicitly, tend toward
a Technical/Managerial Approach. - Community members, implicitly or explicitly, tend
toward the Historically Situated Approach. - An understanding of the similarities and
differences can be helpful in pursuing changes in
curriculum and instructional practice.
45Evaluating Act 31
- These are guidelines, not criteria.
- They can serve as a basis for focusing discussion
when examining curriculum. - The assumed policy context includes academic
standards and large-scale assessment.
46Questions and Discussion
47DPIAmerican Indian Studies Program
- Contact Information
- J P Leary
- Consultant
- PO Box 7841
- Madison, WI 53707-7841
- 608/267-2283
- jp.leary_at_dpi.wi.gov
- Connie Ellingson,
- Program Assistant
- PO Box 7841
- Madison, WI 53707-7841
- 608/267-9155
- connie.ellingson_at_dpi.wi.gov